PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1967 PAGE TWO TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 4,1967 STATE DEPARTMENT PANEL: Med Program Provides Personal Touch 4A Advisors Disagree on Soviet Role In Communist China's By The Associated Press Members of the State Depart- ment's new advisory panel of specialists on China are in sharp disagreement over the Soviet role in Communist China's present turmoil. Prof. Alexander Eckstein of the University's economics department says that the primary factors in the, struggle between Chairman Mao Tse-tung and the old guard party organization are internal, but that the Sino-Soviet dispute is closely intertwined with the do- mestic purge. A. Doak Barnett, acting director of the East Asian Institute, Co- lumbia University, strongly main- tains that the fundamental causes of the present struggle among the Chinese Red leaders are domestic. He sees Communist China tending to turn toward and become more preoccupied with internal problems and less adventurous in the future. Robert A. Scalapino, chairman c c I t t i 3 1 1 1 FILMS of the political science department of the University of California at Berkeley, disagrees and contends that foreign policy reverses and particularly the Sino-Soviet rup- ture have not been important but will become increasingly so as the crisis mounts. Barnett said it is impossible to foresee restoration of the type of Sino-Soviet relations that existed in the 1950s. But if a new type of leadership comes to Communist China, he could see small steps taken to reduce the present fric- tion. Eckstein recalled the pact be- tween the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany at the outset of World War I and cautioned: "I don't think we can totally rule out the reconciliation between the Soviet Union and Communist China." All three consider 1958, the year of Mao's "great leap forward," as the beginning of the crisis for him. Eckstein said the food crisis that followed Mao's orders to estab- lish communes profoundly shook the confidence of his followers. The worsening of relations with )truggles the Soviet Union, he said, stem- med from the resulting internal policy clashes. "Mao is deeply concerned China should not follow Moscow's way," Eckstein said, adding that Mao profoundly believes he can sub- stitute revolutionary enthusiasm for technical competence. Barnett said it is fairly clear that Mao is using the military and the paramiiltary forces to sur- round the party organization. "That doesn't mean there isn't any division inside the army, but it is clear that the party appa- ratus is under attack." Scalapino said a mission of the Japan Communist party to Peking in February 1966 sought a united front in support of North Vietnam and was able to obtain agreements' with North Korea and North Viet- namese leaders. But, he said, the negotiations with top Chinese leaders reached no agreement be- cause , of the differences then existing at the top Chinese level on policy towards supporting North Vietnam militarily. Personal training is possible for today's medical student despite large classes and a staggering amount of data to learn, a new University program reveals. But it does require cooperation on many fronts, professional sup- port, willing students and helpful,! interested faculty. The special student program in anesthesiology may even be so good that it has a future as an elective portion of the medical school curriculum, says Dr. Robert B. Sweet, chairman of the Uni- versity Medical School's depart- ment of anesthesiology. Called the student preceptorship in anesthesiology, the program, supported by the American Society of Anesthesiologists, gives a med- ical student personal clinical train- ing. It is designed to give seniors the kind of experience not possible in classrooms. They work under direct supervision and tutelage of a preceptor, and a practicing anesthesiologist. John Wittekindt, a senior medi- cal student from Downers Grove, Ill., gave up vacation days to be a preceptee at the University. He, says the program gave him real insight into the problems of anes- thesiology. Interested in surgery,' he believes the opportunity for clinical experience lets the student "see just how closely the anes- thesiologists and surgeons work together." The student spends considerable time in the operating room of the hospital, where he learns to use anesthetics and equipment under tutelage of a doctor. Patient care is a vital part of the learning ex- perience which the busy medical school schedule sometimes mini- mizes. The preceptee participates in consultations, learns about problems of acute respiratory dis- tressfl inhalation therapy, resusci- tation, and management of car- diac arrest. Dr. Jay S. Finch, instructor in anesthesiology and a former med- ical stundent here, says the pre- ceptorship "gives the student a chance to do things, not just be an observer." "It is possible for a medical student to go through med school without any exposure to anesthe- siology," Dr. Finch points out. "This type of program helps fill the gap for the student.' Members of the American So- ciety of Anesthesiologists have contributed $100,000 to support the project in 1967. The society expects to expand the program to include about 350 students, and will pay each preceptee $75 per week. "The interest shown by the practicing anesthesiologists in this coutry in this type of preceptor- ship training shows that they rec- ognibe the great need for more physicians in this field," says Dr. Sweet. It is hoped that with the pre- ceptorship, more students will be- come interested in anesthesiology, as a specialty career, he em- phasized. "The preceptorship gives theI medical student an opportunity to find out the scope of anesthe-j siology, and to discover that all his opportunities are not confined to the operating room, but to out- side relationships as well-the re- covery room, intensive care unit, the laboratory and inhalation therapy." Dr. Sweet believes, the student not only learns to administer anesthesthetic agents under close supervision and become fully ac- quainted with the speciality, but also to achieve a close relationship with the faculty. The preceptorship program could influence current planning by medical educators to revise cur- riculum. A newer speciality, anes- thesiology gets relatively little at- tention in the traditional medical school curriculum. Dr. Sweet believes the program deserves a trial of some years to see whether the objectives are ac- complished. The ASA plans to make a comprehensive study of the preceptees, as well as the co- operating schools and hospitals. A follow-up will be made of each participating student, to de- termine whether he maintains an interest in anesthesiology and be- comes a career specialist. I1 Fran Gripping, Powerful By DAVID MORRIS "La Tete Contre Les Murs'" shown Thursday and last night at; Cinema Guild, is a movie of un- usual power. Director Georges Franju, of the French anarchist school, maintains an uncomfort- able but nonetheless successful grip on his audience frombegin- ning to end. His subject is the conflict be- tween man and society with re- spect to individual freedom, and he uses the insane asylum as his battleground. Franju depicts two points of view concerning this con- flict in his protagonists. One of these people is a young rebel for whom freedom is the most im- portant requirement of his exist- ence. This freedom is conveyed in an excellent opening scene while he is wildly scrambling on a motor- cycle, and later shown in his. re- peated escapes from the asylum. Heis Franju's hero , but in the blackness of the director's vision he is doomed.' The message seems to be that while the struggle of one man for absolute freedom is noble and admirable, it has no resolution in a .society. Thus the rebel must necessarily be confined, separated in an institution repre- senting the values of society. On the other hand, those values may well be stifling and inhuman. The head psychiatrist of the asyl- um is a symbol of fear and life- lessness which characterize many of those who have made the so- called adjustment to society. His, complete inability to understand Phone 482-2056 ExacaOoCARPE TR ROAD FIRST OPEN 5:30 P.).!. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN FREE HEATERS Shown at 7:05 & 11:50 COLORB By OLUXE Also-Shown at 8:50 Only COLORN., ew. PLUS-THIRD BIG FEATURE "CURSE OF THE LIVING CORPSE" Shown at 10:25 Only the elemental desire for freedomt is displayed in a moving scene in which an inmate chooses suicide as his only release from the asylum. The psychiatrist consoles himself in the fact that he did1 not invent the methods he uses. Besides the philosophic questioni of freedom, Franju presents thel social problem of psychiatric care.1 He asks wether the purpose of an asylum is to protect society or cure the insane. In depicting the opposing methods of two psychi- atrists he comes out strongly in favor of those stressing freedom over confinement. Throughout the movie there are effective scenes of men broken by the sense of im- prisonment which pervades the psychiatric institution. Franju also comments on the attitude of the public toward the insane. One short but forceful statement occurs when two hunt- ers spot the hero escaping and while one shoots him like an ani- mal, the other frantically screams "madman, madman." The mood of this film is ex- ceedingly pessimistic and leaves one more than a little-frightened at its implication, but it,is com- pelling in its presentation and worthy of much consideration. -4 Dial 8-6416 Holding Again! 4th Week! NOW SHOWING FILMV"-The New Yorker GRAND PRIZE WINNER 1966 CANNES FILM - FESTIVAL r A MAN Wo ) - = ANdIAWOltMAN i SORRY, "FALSTAFF" Your American Premiere Will Simply Have To Wait E L HELD OVER . MICHIGBM DIAL 5-6290 "SUPERIOR! WONDERFUL PELL-MELL ENJOYMENT, IMMENSELY ORIGINAL! THE WAY IT IS WITH THIS NEW BREED OF YOUNG PEOPLE RACING CRAZILY THROUGH A CHANGING WRL D" -Bosley Crowther. N.X 74mws COLUMB1A PICTURES new. JAMES MASON- ALAN BATES-LYNN REOGRAVE1 dmam*CHARLOTTE RAMPLING S mnpftyMARGARETFORSTET dPIER ICOS Dsdm afsMMGARftv W Ifm #.w..e RBERT A.GOLOSTON .10TTOPLASCHKES UO. bSII.VlD NARIZZANO aEWRSin. '. """""" "("' ,m Saturday: 5, 7, 9, and 11 "BRILLIANT, A PERFECT MOVIE, A GREAT MOVIE." -The New Yorker "A SPLASHY, SURF-SOAKED SLEEPER!"-Life Mag. "BREATHTAKING! SWEEPING AND EXCITING." --Newsweek "A DAZZLING ODE TO SUN, SAND AND SURF!" -Time Mag. "HYPNOTIC BEAUTY AND CONTINUOUS EXCITEMENT, BUOYANT FUN."-New York Times "MAGNIFICENT! NOT TO BE MISSED." -Harper's Bazaar "SOMETHING VERY SPECIAL. ANYONE WHO CAN'T SEE THE BEAUTY AND THRILL OF IT HASN'T GOT EYES."-New York Post Sunday: 5, 7, and 9 SHOWS AT 1:15 - 3:05 - 5:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 A BRUCE BROWN FILM IN BEAUTIFUL COLOR _ TODAY at 1:00-3:00-5:05-7:15-9:25 Progrm nfr-N--64TATE Program Information 0 NO 2-6264:1 CINEMA- TONIGHT & TOMORROW Akira Kurosawa's THE LOWER DEPTHS 1957. Japanese, subtitles. Gorky's classic tr, -znrc ton Ih 0 and NATIONALITY CLUBS UNION-LEAGUE of the University of Michigan 00 Fri., Feb. 3 7:00 P.M.-12:30A.M. Sat., Feb. 4 1:O0P.M.-12:30 A.M. d0 * Michigan Union * General Admission 50c V * Variety Show 75c Q0 Friday 8 and 10 Saturday 7, 9,and1 1 I(Imnn R nllrenm C- I I 1111 .